St. Louis-based Washington University School of Medicine sports medicine specialists are leading a national study to analyze why revision ACL reconstruction has a high risk of failure, according to a Washington University news release.
Out of the more than 200,000 ACL reconstruction surgeries that are performed in the United States every year, 1-8 percent end in failure. However, revision ACL reconstruction surgery has a 14 percent failure rate. Washington University received $2.6 million grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases to fund the research.
The study will compare surgical techniques and analyze outcomes for patients undergoing ACL surgery to learn why the revision surgery has a higher failure rate. A previous study has found that the strongest predictor for bad outcomes after ACL surgery was whether that surgery was the initial or a revision procedure.
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The study will compare surgical techniques and analyze outcomes for patients undergoing ACL surgery to learn why the revision surgery has a higher failure rate. A previous study has found that the strongest predictor for bad outcomes after ACL surgery was whether that surgery was the initial or a revision procedure.
Related Articles on Knee Surgery:
The Relevance of Partial Knee Replacements: 7 Things to Know
Beyond Traditional Knee Surgery: Options for Knee Surgery With Better Outcomes
10 Points on Personalized Knee Replacements